Lights of Christmas builds on spectacle for young, old

The Lights of Christmas at Warm Beach Camp is in its 16th year, but even this popular holiday destination is improving with age.

If you are not familiar with the Lights of Christmas, it’s renowned as the Northwest’s largest holiday light display. But it’s more than that. It’s a 22-night, over-the-top festival experience in Stanwood that combines family activities with all sorts of live entertainment.

Though it’s hard to improve on more than a million holiday lights, five entertainment stages, Polar Express Train rides and Bruce the Talking Spruce, there are a few new things in place this year to “keep the event looking fresh,” spokesman Patrick Patterson said.

“We wanted to have some new and wonderful surprises for people returning and also expand the capacity to serve more people,” Patterson said.

One of the additions this year is a light display called “Gloria,” a grouping of seven angels all done in clear white lights that are positioned 9 to 10 feet off the ground, heralding the entrance to the Nativity scene, with three shafts of light shooting up from the ground.

“The whole thing is dramatic and quite beautiful,” Patterson said.

Also, the area known as Frontier Camp is receiving an expanded “Christmas Falls,” a waterfall and river, all in lights.

Patterson described it as blue lights that cascade down through the trees and wend through cabins to a marsh or pond area with different kinds of plants, reeds and flowers and even lighted deer.

The expanded “waterfalls” area is to highlight the natural wonders of the Pacific Northwest. It features a walking path through Frontier Camp and out to the petting farm, Patterson said.

And for those visitors who like their doughnuts fresh, warm and fast, the popular mini-doughnut-making tent has been expanded and relocated. Now there’s no waiting in line for 45 minutes as four machines are rolling out the mini sweets lickety-split.

Returning favorites include The Bayside Ornament Shoppe, which allows visitors to buy or create their own ornament.

The Warm Beach toy shop returns this year. It has been renamed Elf Land Toy Shop, where families can make wooden toys such as yo-yos, tops and wooden ornaments.

Visitors to Warm Beach can also shop for Christmas gifts, keep toasty around one of several warming fires or be entertained at one of the five entertainment stages: